Art as a medicine: Poetics of pain in the work of Rose Vidal
Rose Vidal's novel "Drama Doll" (2025) launches Yannick Haenel's new "Aventures" series at Gallimard and places pain at the center of a narrative that functions not as a linear account, but as a polyphonic montage: conversations, medical details, memories, mythical analogies, art historical references. Pain appears here not only as a theme, but as a formative principle. The narrative flow is permeated by pauses, digressions, and repetitions—structures that resemble the rhythm of chronic pain: it recurs, it cannot be resolved, it modulates intensity and perception. At the heart of the story are Emmanuelle's years of chronic pain, caused by a failed epidural during the birth of her twin sons in California, during which one of the twins, Clément, died. This traumatic experience leads Emmanuelle into a morphine addiction that accompanies her for over two decades. The narrator connects Emmanuelle's story with her own experiences, especially her chronic sensitivity to cold, which she understands as a form of suffering.
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